Focus on Faith - Diwali 2023 – the Festival of Lights

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This year Diwali, the Festival of Lights is celebrated on Sunday 12 November. Diwali is celebrated by Hindus, Jains, Sikhs and some Buddhists. It relates to harvest and new year celebrations and represents new beginnings as well as the triumph of good over evil and light over darkness. 

Solihull Council encourages you to celebrate this festival and come along to the events taking place across the borough. 

Commencing on Thursday 2 November there is plenty to get involved in!

Events

Diwali at The Core – Family Workshops 

From rangoli patterns to bhangra dancing to shadow-puppet making and giant communal artworks – there’s something for everyone. Thursday 2 November, The Core, timings vary.

From Modernity to Tradition 

An Evening of Indian Dance with Sampad South Asian Arts and Heritage. Tuesday 7 November, The Core Studio at 7pm. For further details, please click here

Diwali Sari Sari Night

Dress up for a dazzling evening of food, music, and dance! Dress up, glow up and sparkle on this starry night to celebrate Diwali with a lantern parade through Solihull town centre. No need to book, just turn up! Thursday 9 November, The Core, meet at 5.30pm, parade starts at 6pm.

Diwali Light Trail 

Join the Warwickshire Wildlife Trust and discover the Diwali Light Trail around the Parkridge Nature Reserve. The event runs from Monday 6 November to Sunday 12 November 2023 at Parkridge Nature Reserve, from 4:30-8pm.

Diwali for Hindus commemorates the day of the return of the deities Rama and Sita to Ayodhya after a 14-year exile, as well as the day Mother Goddess Durga defeated the demon, Mahisha. The citizens celebrated with lighting candles; hence why Diwali is also known as the Festival of Lights. There is great celebration through food and firework displays and it is a time where families get together and exchange gifts. Diwali lasts for five days, marking the start of the Hindu New Year. The Hindu Calendar is 57 years ahead of the Gregorian Calendar used in the Western world so the new Hindu year will be 2080.

Sikhs, meanwhile, celebrate Guru Hargobind’s release from a Mughal Empire prison and return to Amritsar, where residents lit divas (oil lamps) throughout the city to celebrate the occasion. This celebration coincides with Diwali and is called Bandi Chhorr Divas, which translates to ‘Day of Breaking from False Bonds’. Sikhs light up the Golden Temple and light lamps and candles in other places.

Happy Diwali!